Except Red Shirting cost the school $$$ for the kid’s scholarship. You only get 12.6/year. By PGing school gets a kid a year older without the cost of using scholarship dollars.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:34 amRight.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:01 amHe isn’t re-classing to look good against younger kids.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:42 amthe push forward has been part of the discussion here.AreaLax wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:30 amHe is re-class. Could be the UVA is stacking so many higher stars that he going the PG route to try and get playing time.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:05 am it's october 12 and we have the first '25 on the board. fwiw, it looks like he can play.
https://twitter.com/tyxanders/status/15 ... Jv7jA&s=19
and here we are.
He already has the commitment, apparently.
If there was transparency about age and other attributes, it might well be obvious as to the logic of taking an extra year before college.
Could be he's relatively young, could be he'd benefit from more advanced academic preparation, who knows...it's a different path than doing a red shirt year, which is the more usual option if a coach simply wants to stockpile a player.
Recruiting, the exact science
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
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- Posts: 9
- Joined: Tue Oct 25, 2022 9:32 am
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
What I am seeing is that at one time LI, Baltimore and a limited Upstate NY were the hubs of youth lax. It’s now moving to Southern CT. Darian, Greenwich, New Canaan and the like. Rich parents see Lax as a way for their child to get into a high academic school. Kid with a 1330 SAT and 95 average has zero chance of going to Harvard or Yale or other high end academic schools. Same kid who rocks it at Lax gets into those same schools.
These parents don’t care about $$$ and the cost of a private school education. They’ve been paying more per year to send their kid to Taft, Salisbury, Deerfield and other NE Prep schools. They are willing to pay for a PG year or a repeat grade to get their kid into these types of high academic schools.
They believe that the school will get their kid a better job and a better life down the road. They are probably correct.
Just look at how the club programs from that area have flourished over the past five years.
Just another reason why the general public looks at lax like they look at squash and crew: Rich white person sport.
These parents don’t care about $$$ and the cost of a private school education. They’ve been paying more per year to send their kid to Taft, Salisbury, Deerfield and other NE Prep schools. They are willing to pay for a PG year or a repeat grade to get their kid into these types of high academic schools.
They believe that the school will get their kid a better job and a better life down the road. They are probably correct.
Just look at how the club programs from that area have flourished over the past five years.
Just another reason why the general public looks at lax like they look at squash and crew: Rich white person sport.
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
Bingo - the reclass racket has cemented lacrosse's role as affirmative action for upper-class, white kids.Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:42 am Rich parents see Lax as a way for their child to get into a high academic school ...
Just another reason why the general public looks at lax like they look at squash and crew: Rich white person sport.
- MDlaxfan76
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
As we never went through this with our son nor did any of my other family, I could well be mistaken, but seems to me that the PG year (unless a significant scholarship from the prep school) is quite costly to the family. I don't think (again, no personal experience) that a kid in college needs to be allocated a scholarship if redshirted (though they could get a piece). Spreading out the college payments over 5 years, instead of four, is how much more costly than the straight four? Do you not take an off term or two along the way, get the credits needed but spread out? Do an internship, etc? Is it pretty much a direct tradeoff with the extra prep tuition? (these prep schools get darn expensive!).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:14 amExcept Red Shirting cost the school $$$ for the kid’s scholarship. You only get 12.6/year. By PGing school gets a kid a year older without the cost of using scholarship dollars.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:34 amRight.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:01 amHe isn’t re-classing to look good against younger kids.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:42 amthe push forward has been part of the discussion here.AreaLax wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:30 amHe is re-class. Could be the UVA is stacking so many higher stars that he going the PG route to try and get playing time.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:05 am it's october 12 and we have the first '25 on the board. fwiw, it looks like he can play.
https://twitter.com/tyxanders/status/15 ... Jv7jA&s=19
and here we are.
He already has the commitment, apparently.
If there was transparency about age and other attributes, it might well be obvious as to the logic of taking an extra year before college.
Could be he's relatively young, could be he'd benefit from more advanced academic preparation, who knows...it's a different path than doing a red shirt year, which is the more usual option if a coach simply wants to stockpile a player.
I'm definitely not in the know on this...but interested to understand.
Last edited by MDlaxfan76 on Wed Nov 16, 2022 12:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- MDlaxfan76
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- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
hmmm, I dunno about the "moving" part, but the sport has definitely expanded to many wealthier enclaves around the country. (Northeast prep schools have long been a source of lax players going to say Ivy and NESCAC, not exactly a new phenomenon....and the hubs have only multiplied, not moved).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:42 am What I am seeing is that at one time LI, Baltimore and a limited Upstate NY were the hubs of youth lax. It’s now moving to Southern CT. Darian, Greenwich, New Canaan and the like. Rich parents see Lax as a way for their child to get into a high academic school. Kid with a 1330 SAT and 95 average has zero chance of going to Harvard or Yale or other high end academic schools. Same kid who rocks it at Lax gets into those same schools.
These parents don’t care about $$$ and the cost of a private school education. They’ve been paying more per year to send their kid to Taft, Salisbury, Deerfield and other NE Prep schools. They are willing to pay for a PG year or a repeat grade to get their kid into these types of high academic schools.
They believe that the school will get their kid a better job and a better life down the road. They are probably correct.
Just look at how the club programs from that area have flourished over the past five years.
Just another reason why the general public looks at lax like they look at squash and crew: Rich white person sport.
It's accurate that sports are an entry ticket to higher selectivity schools, and it's also accurate to say that those athletes choosing those paths have a pretty darn strong success record on average post college.
But the numbers of such players, from all over the country, has expanded significantly more than the number of slots at the most selective colleges. So, the difficulty of being one of those few selected for those particular schools has gone up a ton...indeed, you hear bitter grousing from some parents who'd assumed that all the dough they'd poured into Johnny's lax status would pay off, when it doesn't result in that selection. Yes, particularly from some of the areas you mention...that, too, isn't really new...in my era in the '70's alums were grousing when their kids didn't get the nod...competitive standards keep going up...and way, way up now. True for the whole school, not just the athletes.
It was interesting, yesterday, to hear the new AD at my alma mater discuss the importance they are placing on helping their coaches recruit from all over the country, the emphasis on contributing to the college's overall objectives, socio-economic, regional diversity, academic and leadership potentials, etc. As a school that couldn't care less about whether a family can pay the freight, they're interested in increasing the pool of athletes they attract, the best possible recruits across dimensions. That's more the case than not at most of the most selective schools.
It's a different dynamic with schools who need those full freight parents to balance the budget...
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
Just an example but I know of a 4 Top 100 kid who ended up being asked to PG because there were no spots for him due to COVID. Prep schools across NE wanted him as he was a top 50 player in his class. Basically had five schools bidding against each other for him. Ended up costing his family $10K to attend the prep school which included tuition, room and board. Those schools have a ton of money and if they want you they will do what is necessary to get you.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:53 amAs we never went through this with our son nor did any of my other family, I could well be mistaken, but seems to me that the PG year (unless a significant scholarship from the prep school) is quite costly to the family. I don't think (again, no personal experience) that a kid in college needs to be allocated a scholarship if redshirted (though they could get a piece). Spreading out the college payments over 5 years, instead of four, is how much more costly than the straight four? Do you not take an off term or two along the way, get the credits needed but spread out? Do an internship, etc? Is it pretty much a direct tradeoff with the extra prep tuition? (these prep schools get darn expensive!).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:14 amExcept Red Shirting cost the school $$$ for the kid’s scholarship. You only get 12.6/year. By PGing school gets a kid a year older without the cost of using scholarship dollars.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:34 amRight.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:01 amHe isn’t re-classing to look good against younger kids.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:42 amthe push forward has been part of the discussion here.AreaLax wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:30 amHe is re-class. Could be the UVA is stacking so many higher stars that he going the PG route to try and get playing time.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:05 am it's october 12 and we have the first '25 on the board. fwiw, it looks like he can play.
https://twitter.com/tyxanders/status/15 ... Jv7jA&s=19
and here we are.
He already has the commitment, apparently.
If there was transparency about age and other attributes, it might well be obvious as to the logic of taking an extra year before college.
Could be he's relatively young, could be he'd benefit from more advanced academic preparation, who knows...it's a different path than doing a red shirt year, which is the more usual option if a coach simply wants to stockpile a player.
I'm definitely not in the know on this...but interested to understand.
- MDlaxfan76
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- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
yup, totally plausible.Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 12:39 pmJust an example but I know of a 4 Top 100 kid who ended up being asked to PG because there were no spots for him due to COVID. Prep schools across NE wanted him as he was a top 50 player in his class. Basically had five schools bidding against each other for him. Ended up costing his family $10K to attend the prep school which included tuition, room and board. Those schools have a ton of money and if they want you they will do what is necessary to get you.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:53 amAs we never went through this with our son nor did any of my other family, I could well be mistaken, but seems to me that the PG year (unless a significant scholarship from the prep school) is quite costly to the family. I don't think (again, no personal experience) that a kid in college needs to be allocated a scholarship if redshirted (though they could get a piece). Spreading out the college payments over 5 years, instead of four, is how much more costly than the straight four? Do you not take an off term or two along the way, get the credits needed but spread out? Do an internship, etc? Is it pretty much a direct tradeoff with the extra prep tuition? (these prep schools get darn expensive!).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:14 amExcept Red Shirting cost the school $$$ for the kid’s scholarship. You only get 12.6/year. By PGing school gets a kid a year older without the cost of using scholarship dollars.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:34 amRight.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:01 amHe isn’t re-classing to look good against younger kids.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:42 amthe push forward has been part of the discussion here.AreaLax wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:30 amHe is re-class. Could be the UVA is stacking so many higher stars that he going the PG route to try and get playing time.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:05 am it's october 12 and we have the first '25 on the board. fwiw, it looks like he can play.
https://twitter.com/tyxanders/status/15 ... Jv7jA&s=19
and here we are.
He already has the commitment, apparently.
If there was transparency about age and other attributes, it might well be obvious as to the logic of taking an extra year before college.
Could be he's relatively young, could be he'd benefit from more advanced academic preparation, who knows...it's a different path than doing a red shirt year, which is the more usual option if a coach simply wants to stockpile a player.
I'm definitely not in the know on this...but interested to understand.
It's why I'm not a fan of PG's for athletic purposes.
If a kid needs some serious extra academic prep, and is an athlete, I get it.
But just to get the slot, definitely ugh...
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
A relative of mine is doing a PG year at a top NE prep school, pretty much $0. They've got a lot more wiggle room with $$ than most colleges.Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 12:39 pmJust an example but I know of a 4 Top 100 kid who ended up being asked to PG because there were no spots for him due to COVID. Prep schools across NE wanted him as he was a top 50 player in his class. Basically had five schools bidding against each other for him. Ended up costing his family $10K to attend the prep school which included tuition, room and board. Those schools have a ton of money and if they want you they will do what is necessary to get you.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:53 amAs we never went through this with our son nor did any of my other family, I could well be mistaken, but seems to me that the PG year (unless a significant scholarship from the prep school) is quite costly to the family. I don't think (again, no personal experience) that a kid in college needs to be allocated a scholarship if redshirted (though they could get a piece). Spreading out the college payments over 5 years, instead of four, is how much more costly than the straight four? Do you not take an off term or two along the way, get the credits needed but spread out? Do an internship, etc? Is it pretty much a direct tradeoff with the extra prep tuition? (these prep schools get darn expensive!).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:14 amExcept Red Shirting cost the school $$$ for the kid’s scholarship. You only get 12.6/year. By PGing school gets a kid a year older without the cost of using scholarship dollars.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:34 amRight.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:01 amHe isn’t re-classing to look good against younger kids.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:42 amthe push forward has been part of the discussion here.AreaLax wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:30 amHe is re-class. Could be the UVA is stacking so many higher stars that he going the PG route to try and get playing time.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:05 am it's october 12 and we have the first '25 on the board. fwiw, it looks like he can play.
https://twitter.com/tyxanders/status/15 ... Jv7jA&s=19
and here we are.
He already has the commitment, apparently.
If there was transparency about age and other attributes, it might well be obvious as to the logic of taking an extra year before college.
Could be he's relatively young, could be he'd benefit from more advanced academic preparation, who knows...it's a different path than doing a red shirt year, which is the more usual option if a coach simply wants to stockpile a player.
I'm definitely not in the know on this...but interested to understand.
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
That's a shame.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 10:17 amthey didn't need a body. they had enough guys.FCCTlaxFan wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 9:35 amFall Lacrosse is strange. If the 2025 took playing time away from a 2026 it is pretty bad as it just means the 2026 team wanted to win. If the 2026 team really need a body then so be it. Hopefully the defensive players covering the lefty attackman got better and had a fun playing against him.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Tue Nov 15, 2022 8:11 pmThey had no “lefty attack” so he was the “one” sent down to play that specialty spot. I didn’t ask him why he didn’t just play what he had. It came up when I told him it’s easy to look good playing down and he relayed the story from a recent weekend of more club lacrosse….wgdsr wrote: ↑Tue Nov 15, 2022 8:00 pmso those youngins played with 10 guys? impressive.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Tue Nov 15, 2022 7:29 pmTalked to a club guy who said he sent a small 2025 go down to play with his 2026s because they needed one more….Looked like best player on the field but is Just average on the 2025. Let this coaches wonder why kids stink when they land.wgdsr wrote: ↑Tue Nov 15, 2022 5:57 pmclub operators probably not going to be the biggest advocates, it seems. usalax fully went along with this even creating their own tournaments and promo (and insurance).Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Tue Nov 15, 2022 5:05 pm https://www.insidelacrosse.com/article/ ... osse/60381
Some sanity perhaps
it sounds like they'll do youth because clubs can't promote recruiting @ middle school kids anymore. slimy bunch, i had trouble reading those club guys. b silcott's a stand up guy.
BTW, he mentioned he trained your guy 3-4 hours a week over the Summer.
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
It appears to me that the relationship between the sport and the schools has changed dramatically over the past 2 generations. Lacrosse went from something that was essentially a club sport by today's standards (in terms of budgets and school commitment) in the 70's and early 80's, to a marketing tool in the 90's and 00's (promoting a preppy "collegiate" image), to an expensive recruiting tool today. It appears to me that colleges support lacrosse because it attracts a very unique student/future alumni.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 12:16 pmhmmm, I dunno about the "moving" part, but the sport has definitely expanded to many wealthier enclaves around the country. (Northeast prep schools have long been a source of lax players going to say Ivy and NESCAC, not exactly a new phenomenon....and the hubs have only multiplied, not moved).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:42 am What I am seeing is that at one time LI, Baltimore and a limited Upstate NY were the hubs of youth lax. It’s now moving to Southern CT. Darian, Greenwich, New Canaan and the like. Rich parents see Lax as a way for their child to get into a high academic school. Kid with a 1330 SAT and 95 average has zero chance of going to Harvard or Yale or other high end academic schools. Same kid who rocks it at Lax gets into those same schools.
These parents don’t care about $$$ and the cost of a private school education. They’ve been paying more per year to send their kid to Taft, Salisbury, Deerfield and other NE Prep schools. They are willing to pay for a PG year or a repeat grade to get their kid into these types of high academic schools.
They believe that the school will get their kid a better job and a better life down the road. They are probably correct.
Just look at how the club programs from that area have flourished over the past five years.
Just another reason why the general public looks at lax like they look at squash and crew: Rich white person sport.
It's accurate that sports are an entry ticket to higher selectivity schools, and it's also accurate to say that those athletes choosing those paths have a pretty darn strong success record on average post college.
But the numbers of such players, from all over the country, has expanded significantly more than the number of slots at the most selective colleges. So, the difficulty of being one of those few selected for those particular schools has gone up a ton...indeed, you hear bitter grousing from some parents who'd assumed that all the dough they'd poured into Johnny's lax status would pay off, when it doesn't result in that selection. Yes, particularly from some of the areas you mention...that, too, isn't really new...in my era in the '70's alums were grousing when their kids didn't get the nod...competitive standards keep going up...and way, way up now. True for the whole school, not just the athletes.
It was interesting, yesterday, to hear the new AD at my alma mater discuss the importance they are placing on helping their coaches recruit from all over the country, the emphasis on contributing to the college's overall objectives, socio-economic, regional diversity, academic and leadership potentials, etc. As a school that couldn't care less about whether a family can pay the freight, they're interested in increasing the pool of athletes they attract, the best possible recruits across dimensions. That's more the case than not at most of the most selective schools.
It's a different dynamic with schools who need those full freight parents to balance the budget...
- Your average lacrosse player's family can afford full price tuition (including being willing to burn $10k - $60k on a PG year if asked).
- Just as importantly, that same player as a result of family/prep-school/college lacrosse networks is far more likely to turn into an alumni who gives large sums of money to his alma mater.
Colleges today are laser focused on two things: fundraising and brand building. The "Warrior" LaxBro culture of just 15 years ago would never fly today - and I can't imagine the pressure coaches felt during the transition to eliminate that kind of culture from the sport. It undid many hall of fame caliber coaches careers... But to the extent lacrosse programs mind their P's and Q's, check a few boxes on DEI and pop out nice little check-writing alumni - they will continue to get support from administrations.
STILL somewhere back in the day....
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
- MDlaxfan76
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
I'm not sure that's as relevant today among the most selective schools with deep endowments, but do you think that applies to ACC and Big 10, as well as the smaller schools? Definitely true of the smaller.HooDat wrote: ↑Thu Nov 17, 2022 10:52 amIt appears to me that the relationship between the sport and the schools has changed dramatically over the past 2 generations. Lacrosse went from something that was essentially a club sport by today's standards (in terms of budgets and school commitment) in the 70's and early 80's, to a marketing tool in the 90's and 00's (promoting a preppy "collegiate" image), to an expensive recruiting tool today. It appears to me that colleges support lacrosse because it attracts a very unique student/future alumni.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 12:16 pmhmmm, I dunno about the "moving" part, but the sport has definitely expanded to many wealthier enclaves around the country. (Northeast prep schools have long been a source of lax players going to say Ivy and NESCAC, not exactly a new phenomenon....and the hubs have only multiplied, not moved).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:42 am What I am seeing is that at one time LI, Baltimore and a limited Upstate NY were the hubs of youth lax. It’s now moving to Southern CT. Darian, Greenwich, New Canaan and the like. Rich parents see Lax as a way for their child to get into a high academic school. Kid with a 1330 SAT and 95 average has zero chance of going to Harvard or Yale or other high end academic schools. Same kid who rocks it at Lax gets into those same schools.
These parents don’t care about $$$ and the cost of a private school education. They’ve been paying more per year to send their kid to Taft, Salisbury, Deerfield and other NE Prep schools. They are willing to pay for a PG year or a repeat grade to get their kid into these types of high academic schools.
They believe that the school will get their kid a better job and a better life down the road. They are probably correct.
Just look at how the club programs from that area have flourished over the past five years.
Just another reason why the general public looks at lax like they look at squash and crew: Rich white person sport.
It's accurate that sports are an entry ticket to higher selectivity schools, and it's also accurate to say that those athletes choosing those paths have a pretty darn strong success record on average post college.
But the numbers of such players, from all over the country, has expanded significantly more than the number of slots at the most selective colleges. So, the difficulty of being one of those few selected for those particular schools has gone up a ton...indeed, you hear bitter grousing from some parents who'd assumed that all the dough they'd poured into Johnny's lax status would pay off, when it doesn't result in that selection. Yes, particularly from some of the areas you mention...that, too, isn't really new...in my era in the '70's alums were grousing when their kids didn't get the nod...competitive standards keep going up...and way, way up now. True for the whole school, not just the athletes.
It was interesting, yesterday, to hear the new AD at my alma mater discuss the importance they are placing on helping their coaches recruit from all over the country, the emphasis on contributing to the college's overall objectives, socio-economic, regional diversity, academic and leadership potentials, etc. As a school that couldn't care less about whether a family can pay the freight, they're interested in increasing the pool of athletes they attract, the best possible recruits across dimensions. That's more the case than not at most of the most selective schools.
It's a different dynamic with schools who need those full freight parents to balance the budget...
- Your average lacrosse player's family can afford full price tuition (including being willing to burn $10k - $60k on a PG year if asked).
- Just as importantly, that same player as a result of family/prep-school/college lacrosse networks is far more likely to turn into an alumni who gives large sums of money to his alma mater.
Colleges today are laser focused on two things: fundraising and brand building. The "Warrior" LaxBro culture of just 15 years ago would never fly today - and I can't imagine the pressure coaches felt during the transition to eliminate that kind of culture from the sport. It undid many hall of fame caliber coaches careers... But to the extent lacrosse programs mind their P's and Q's, check a few boxes on DEI and pop out nice little check-writing alumni - they will continue to get support from administrations.
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
Those "selective" schools have deep endowments precisely because they are laser focused on raising money and protecting (rather, perhaps, than building) their brand.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 17, 2022 5:44 pm I'm not sure that's as relevant today among the most selective schools with deep endowments, but do you think that applies to ACC and Big 10, as well as the smaller schools? Definitely true of the smaller.
If you aren't chasing endowment money as a university president, you will not be the university president for very long. It is their 1st, 2nd and 3rd more important job. Even (especially?) at HYP and Stanford.
STILL somewhere back in the day....
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
- MDlaxfan76
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
I wouldn't argue with the notion that fundraising is a huge part of any college president's job.HooDat wrote: ↑Fri Nov 18, 2022 1:58 pmThose "selective" schools have deep endowments precisely because they are laser focused on raising money and protecting (rather, perhaps, than building) their brand.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 17, 2022 5:44 pm I'm not sure that's as relevant today among the most selective schools with deep endowments, but do you think that applies to ACC and Big 10, as well as the smaller schools? Definitely true of the smaller.
If you aren't chasing endowment money as a university president, you will not be the university president for very long. It is their 1st, 2nd and 3rd more important job. Even (especially?) at HYP and Stanford.
I can also attest the top endowed schools have very well oiled efforts at such.
I don't think, however, that most of those are sitting on their laurels, they're quite focused on advancing and expanding their brand, most of which is actually about education.
I was just in a discussion about the Hopkins engineering school's aspirations, and how they want to get there...want to be seen as top 3. MIT, Caltech...Hopkins. I know what kind of innovation is happening in Hanover, definitely not sitting back.
On the other hand, they're all trying to re-think how they could deliver more education for less money...disruption is coming...not sure they have those answers though...
what I meant was about the full pay lax families...do you think ACC and Big Ten look at that?
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
I’ve got an incongruous story for you on this topic that hits very close to home for me.HooDat wrote: ↑Fri Nov 18, 2022 1:58 pmThose "selective" schools have deep endowments precisely because they are laser focused on raising money and protecting (rather, perhaps, than building) their brand.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 17, 2022 5:44 pm I'm not sure that's as relevant today among the most selective schools with deep endowments, but do you think that applies to ACC and Big 10, as well as the smaller schools? Definitely true of the smaller.
If you aren't chasing endowment money as a university president, you will not be the university president for very long. It is their 1st, 2nd and 3rd more important job. Even (especially?) at HYP and Stanford.
Harvard University, out
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
what a tease !Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 6:28 amI’ve got an incongruous story for you on this topic that hits very close to home for me.HooDat wrote: ↑Fri Nov 18, 2022 1:58 pmThose "selective" schools have deep endowments precisely because they are laser focused on raising money and protecting (rather, perhaps, than building) their brand.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 17, 2022 5:44 pm I'm not sure that's as relevant today among the most selective schools with deep endowments, but do you think that applies to ACC and Big 10, as well as the smaller schools? Definitely true of the smaller.
If you aren't chasing endowment money as a university president, you will not be the university president for very long. It is their 1st, 2nd and 3rd more important job. Even (especially?) at HYP and Stanford.
STILL somewhere back in the day....
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
Re: Recruiting, the exact science
Easy task when you're pulling $1 Billion per year from the Federal Government for reseach, dwarfing all other Universities on the planet.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Nov 18, 2022 2:51 pm I was just in a discussion about the Hopkins engineering school's aspirations, and how they want to get there...want to be seen as top 3. MIT, Caltech...Hopkins. I know what kind of innovation is happening in Hanover, definitely not sitting back.
All Hop hard sciences should be at the top.
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
I mean look at the endowment of the school I support going back to Gearan as president in 1998 to 2015 or so compared against, like, inflation and then see who our president is now. Draw that line.HooDat wrote: ↑Mon Nov 21, 2022 10:29 amwhat a tease !Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 6:28 amI’ve got an incongruous story for you on this topic that hits very close to home for me.HooDat wrote: ↑Fri Nov 18, 2022 1:58 pmThose "selective" schools have deep endowments precisely because they are laser focused on raising money and protecting (rather, perhaps, than building) their brand.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 17, 2022 5:44 pm I'm not sure that's as relevant today among the most selective schools with deep endowments, but do you think that applies to ACC and Big 10, as well as the smaller schools? Definitely true of the smaller.
If you aren't chasing endowment money as a university president, you will not be the university president for very long. It is their 1st, 2nd and 3rd more important job. Even (especially?) at HYP and Stanford.
Harvard University, out
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
To clarify, I am assuming his family's share of the tuition was $10,000 and the rest was covered. A top NE boarding school is +/- $60,000 so that is quite a discount on cost.Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 12:39 pmJust an example but I know of a 4 Top 100 kid who ended up being asked to PG because there were no spots for him due to COVID. Prep schools across NE wanted him as he was a top 50 player in his class. Basically had five schools bidding against each other for him. Ended up costing his family $10K to attend the prep school which included tuition, room and board. Those schools have a ton of money and if they want you they will do what is necessary to get you.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:53 amAs we never went through this with our son nor did any of my other family, I could well be mistaken, but seems to me that the PG year (unless a significant scholarship from the prep school) is quite costly to the family. I don't think (again, no personal experience) that a kid in college needs to be allocated a scholarship if redshirted (though they could get a piece). Spreading out the college payments over 5 years, instead of four, is how much more costly than the straight four? Do you not take an off term or two along the way, get the credits needed but spread out? Do an internship, etc? Is it pretty much a direct tradeoff with the extra prep tuition? (these prep schools get darn expensive!).Laxdad2021 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:14 amExcept Red Shirting cost the school $$$ for the kid’s scholarship. You only get 12.6/year. By PGing school gets a kid a year older without the cost of using scholarship dollars.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:34 amRight.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:01 amHe isn’t re-classing to look good against younger kids.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:42 amthe push forward has been part of the discussion here.AreaLax wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:30 amHe is re-class. Could be the UVA is stacking so many higher stars that he going the PG route to try and get playing time.wgdsr wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:05 am it's october 12 and we have the first '25 on the board. fwiw, it looks like he can play.
https://twitter.com/tyxanders/status/15 ... Jv7jA&s=19
and here we are.
He already has the commitment, apparently.
If there was transparency about age and other attributes, it might well be obvious as to the logic of taking an extra year before college.
Could be he's relatively young, could be he'd benefit from more advanced academic preparation, who knows...it's a different path than doing a red shirt year, which is the more usual option if a coach simply wants to stockpile a player.
I'm definitely not in the know on this...but interested to understand.
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
IL recently came out with a list of additional 3 and 4 star players. Seems to be more fodder for the hype cannon imo. What could be an interesting idea for IL is to evaluate how their starred players improve beyond their sophomore years. I don't recall seeing players being re-evaluated after 10th grade. Rarely, if ever, do they put a previously unranked player in the 4 and 5 star category in their junior or senior years. Quite often the incoming top 100 freshmen seems to be a rehash of the top ranked sophomores/incoming juniors from 2 years prior.
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Re: Recruiting, the exact science
That is incorrect. I counted 22 boys in last year’s (2021) class who weren’t top 100 before the final list came out.oldbartman wrote: ↑Mon Nov 21, 2022 3:16 pm IL recently came out with a list of additional 3 and 4 star players. Seems to be more fodder for the hype cannon imo. What could be an interesting idea for IL is to evaluate how their starred players improve beyond their sophomore years. I don't recall seeing players being re-evaluated after 10th grade. Rarely, if ever, do they put a previously unranked player in the 4 and 5 star category in their junior or senior years. Quite often the incoming top 100 freshmen seems to be a rehash of the top ranked sophomores/incoming juniors from 2 years prior.